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Emergencies in Urology

Markus Hohenfellner ; Richard A. Santucci (eds.)

Resumen/Descripción – provisto por la editorial

No disponible.

Palabras clave – provistas por la editorial

Urology; Emergency Medicine

Disponibilidad
Institución detectada Año de publicación Navegá Descargá Solicitá
No detectada 2007 SpringerLink

Información

Tipo de recurso:

libros

ISBN impreso

978-3-540-48603-9

ISBN electrónico

978-3-540-48605-3

Editor responsable

Springer Nature

País de edición

Reino Unido

Fecha de publicación

Información sobre derechos de publicación

© Springer-Verlag Berlin Heidelberg 2007

Tabla de contenidos

Surgery of Complicated Horseshoe Kidney

J. M. Gil-Vernet

The horseshoe kidney must be regarded as a clinical entity because of the importance of its pathology and its incidence (1/200 pyelograms), even though it has no pathognomonic signs or symptoms.

Palabras clave: Horseshoe Kidney; Renal Anomaly; Pathognomonic Sign; Relevant Family History; Excretory Tract.

21 - Selected Case Reports and Personal Experience | Pp. 530-533

Cold Fire

Ch. F. Heyns

The word for gangrene in my home language, Afrikaans, is kouevuur , literally “cold fire”: to the patient a gangrenous limb “burns like fire,” yet it feels cold. Unlike ordinary fire, which reveals itself by light, heat, and smoke, “cold fire” is an insidious threat, which can be more dangerous than searing flames.

Palabras clave: Ward Round; Home Language; Radical Debridement; Friday Night; Gangrenous Limb.

21 - Selected Case Reports and Personal Experience | Pp. 534-535

Lost in the Kidney

M. Hohenfellner

The general surgeons once presented a patient to us who had had a hemicolectomy for large bowel cancer more than 1 year before. The patient’s immediate problem was that he had developed secondary bilateral renal metastases.

21 - Selected Case Reports and Personal Experience | Pp. 536-536

A Rare Accident

R. Hohenfellner

In 1964, I moved from Vienna to Homburg/Saar to take an Associate Professor position in one of the most recognized departments of urology headed by Prof. C.E. Alken. Still on duty at 4 p.m., I received a call from the chief of the surgical department to join him immediately in the emergency room.

Palabras clave: Suture Line; Vesicovaginal Fistula; Bladder Rupture; Metal Thread; Left Abdominal Wall.

21 - Selected Case Reports and Personal Experience | Pp. 537-538

Appendectomy

R. Hohenfellner

Homburg/Saar 1965. I received the emergency call on Saturday, 11 p.m. during a birthday party and went in the surgical department’s operating room. The senior resident said, “Thank you for coming and please have a look inside.”

Palabras clave: Senior Resident; Emergency Call; Dilate Ureter; Birthday Party; Split Renal Function.

21 - Selected Case Reports and Personal Experience | Pp. 539-540

Posterior Sagittal Approach in Pediatric Urology

F. Ikoma

What is the best route to surgically treat an iatrogenic high-grade female hypospadias in a 2-year-old girl with subsequent, almost total urinary incontinence? Is the posterior sagittal approach the best to treat such a difficult emergency? Or are other treatments more appropriate?

Palabras clave: Bladder Neck; Pediatric Surgeon; Urethral Diverticulum; Pediatric Urology; Anterior Rectal Wall.

21 - Selected Case Reports and Personal Experience | Pp. 541-547

Postoperative Urinary Retention After Hypospadias Repair

F. Ikoma

If complete urinary retention occurs just after removing an indwelling catheter for hypospadias repair, what is the best course of action?

Palabras clave: Public Health; Emergency Medicine; Personal Experience; Urinary Retention; Indwell Catheter.

21 - Selected Case Reports and Personal Experience | Pp. 548-548

Hairs in the Urethra of a Hypospadias Patient

F. Ikoma

When at puberty hairs are found in the skin-urethra formed in a hypospadias patient who has received urethroplasty using penoscrotal skin as a child, what is the best course to follow?

Palabras clave: Personal Experience; Hair Root; Ventral Side; Hair Growth; Fistula Formation.

21 - Selected Case Reports and Personal Experience | Pp. 549-549

A Tale of Two Brothers

W. MÅsson

Reconstruction of the urinary tract using intestinal segments is associated with the risk of numerous side effects, most of which develop gradually after surgery. This case report of two brothers, now 36 and 34 years of age, illustrates an acute emergency situation that requires immediate evaluation and treatment. Both brothers suffered from the same type of life-threatening complication, and different treatment options were applied.

Palabras clave: Urinary Diversion; Continent Urinary Diversion; Cecal Wall; Numerous Side Effect; Large Incisional Hernia.

21 - Selected Case Reports and Personal Experience | Pp. 550-551

Unfortunate Honeymoon Under the Palm Trees

J. A. Martínez-Piñeiro

In February 1989, a 31-year-old Spanish man and his young wife went to Santo Domingo on honeymoon to enjoy the balmy climate and beaches of the Caribbean island, while Europe was freezing.

Palabras clave: Bladder Neck; Palm Tree; Fistulous Tract; Urinary Artificial Sphincter; Omental Flap.

21 - Selected Case Reports and Personal Experience | Pp. 552-553